• Kodak z18 camcorder
    Kodak z18, Kodak’s Z18 camcorder, announced today, has the same chunky shape as the Zi6, Kodak’s flagship pocket cam and the same color-blocked design as the smaller, water-resistant Zx1. Although it’s not the first YouTube cam to shoot 1080p video, it’s certainly a first for Kodak.
    Even more than the resolution bump, though, the biggest change is the introduction of image stabilization, a feature I’ve wanted to see in pocket cams in general. Even though it’s electronic, and not optical, I’d still expect it to offset the shakiness that mars even the crispest of HD pocket cam footage.
    Other upgrades include 5-MP still photo shooting, a larger 2.5-inch display, and an external mic jack (since camcorders like this aren’t exactly known for delivering impressive sound). Like the Zi6 and Zx1, it has an SD/SDHC slot, accommodating cards as large as 32GB. It also comes with an HDMI cable.
    The Zi8 costs $179 and is available in black, red, and blue.
    Record High Definition video (1080p at 30 fps with 16:9 aspect ratio)
    Easily upload recorded footage to YouTube with built-in USB and software
    Expandable SD/SDHC card slot up to 32 GB; Rechargeable batteries and charger included
    Vibrant 2.5-inch viewfinder; Watch footage on HDTV with included cables
    Edit and share videos with included software

    Description:-
    It’s small enough to fit in a pocket, but why would you ever want to put it there? Whether out on the town or just hanging with friends, the Kodak Zi8 Pocket Video Camera captures every experience in stunning 1080p HD video. Stay in focus while you’re on the move with integrated image stabilization. Then kick back and watch all the action on your HDTV or share your scene on YouTube with the built-in USB. The Zi8 pocket video camera has all you need to define yourself in high definition.
    Product Features
    Take full HD 1080p videos wherever you go
    Get sharper videos and less blur thanks to built-in image stabilization
    Premiere your videos in the palm of your hand with the vivid 2.5-inch color LCD
    No cables to worry about–just swing out the USB arm to upload, share and charge
    Get a new perspective–take amazing 5 MP 16:9 widescreen HD still pictures
    Share on Facebook and YouTube with ease–built-in software makes editing and uploading simple
    Compatible with PC and MAC (Use with Apple iLife Suite of products) operating systems
    Compatible with iTunes for syncing with Apple TV, iPhone and iPod Devices
    Plenty of room for more–record up to 10 hours of HD video (Record ~20 min per 1 GB at 720p HD at 30 fps) with the expandable SD/SDHC Card slot that can hold up to 32 GB
    Capture your friends in their best light with smart face tracking technology
    See more details and accurate colors in low light
    Make audio awesome–the external microphone jack lets you record in stereo
    Be ready for the big screen right out of the box with complementary HDMI cable
    Record from a distance or play back on your TV with ease with available remote control
    Grab attention and define your style with the ultra-compact design, stunning looks, and a range of colors
    What’s in the Box:
    Kodak Zi8 Pocket Video Camera
    KLIC-7004 Li-Ion Rechargeable Battery
    Adapter and cable for battery charging
    HDMI and AV cables
    Wrist strap
    User’s Guide
    ArcSoft MediaImpression Software for Kodak (on-camera)
    Buy nowKodak Zi8 HD Pocket Video Camera (Black)

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  • Iphone Virus
    iPhone Virus News: possible iPhone Virus is to be unleashed Thursday. Two researchers, Charles Miller and fellow cybersecurity researcher, Collin Mulliner, have found an iPhone bug that could infect phones virally through SMS. The have plans to reveal the still unpatched iPhone bug at the Black Hat cybersecurity conference in Las Vegas today. If you receive a text message with a single square character, you are advised to immediately turn off your iPhone, as they warn it means that someone has used the bug to take over your iPhone.
    “This is serious. The only thing you can do to prevent it is turn off your phone,” said cybersecurity researcher Charles Miller. “Someone could pretty quickly take over every iPhone in the world with this.”
    The two found the bug in the way the iPhone handles text messages. Once in control, the hacker has complete control over your iPhone, allowing them to make calls, visit websites, turn on the camera and more importantly they can keep sending the bug via SMS.
    They have reached out to Apple, well over a month ago about this vulnerability but have not heard back. Back in 2007, Charles Miller also found a bug that allowed someone to remotely hijack the iPhone using the browser.
    It’s not clear if Apple has included a fix in iPhone OS 3.1, which recently entered beta 3 stage, so will not be ready by Thursday. Be careful out there and maybe we’ll have more information this afternoon on a possible fix from Apple.
    It’s not an iPhone virus, it’s just a security hole. Although Apple was notified by the iPhone SMS hack about 6 weeks ago, the company didn’t address this glitch and at the moment there is no patch that could fix it. According to the researchers, the iPhone SMS hack is possible thanks to a “serious memory corruption bug” caused by the way the iPhone handles an SMS.
    Mulliner said that an similar SMS hack was found in the Android OS last week, and after only one day Google patched the security hole. Take that Apple! Why wouldn’t Apple patch the iPhone if the company knows about the security hole? What are these guys waiting? To hack every iPhone in the world? We’re waiting, but we’re not patient anymore.

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  • Samsung marine and Samsung 3010
    Samsung marine and Samsung 3010, Samsung India has rolled out an integrated campaign to promote its new ‘water, shock and dust-proof phone’, Samsung Marine B2100.
    “The objective of the campaign is to reinforce Samsung’s brand position of ‘Next is what’ in India,” said Alok Agrawal, COO, Cheil India. “Samsung has been known for its sleek and stylish phones. The campaign is to prove that Samsung is also capable of making sturdy, rough and tough phones.”
    This mid-level phone clearly targets two distinct audiences: Upwardly mobile people who have an alternate adventurous lifestyle and thus, will buy B2100 as an add-on phone, and entry-level consumers who will stretch themselves to buy the product as their first as it suits the kind of ‘rough and tough’ work they do such as on construction sites, coastal areas and oil rigs. “The campaign highlights the key features of the phone – water proof, shock proof and dust proof and hence strengthens the ‘ruggedised’ positioning of the phone,” added Agrawal.

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  • Iphone 3.0.1 Update
    Iphone 3.0.1 Update, Just in case you thought Saturday was too long to wait for an iPhone security patch, no reason to worry: Apple on Friday released iPhone Software Update 3.0.1, which fixes the SMS vulnerability demonstrated at the Black Hat security conference on Thursday. Earlier on Friday, U.K. wireless operator O2 said Apple would release the fix on Saturday.apple iphone The flaw, disclosed by security researchers Charlie Miller and Collin Mulliner, could have allowed a vulnerable phone, such as an iPhone, to be taken over remotely. Apple attributes the flaw in the CoreTelephony framework to a memory corruption issue in the decoding of SMS messages, and credits the find to Miller and Mulliner.
    The hefty software update — yes, even an update with just one fix means downloading the entire OS again–is available via iTunes; the exact size varies depending on which version of iPhone is being updated. iPhone users can get the update by connecting their phones to their computers and clicking the “Check for Update” button in iTunes.
    Once again, the world is safe for text messaging — well, unless you’re texting while driving; Apple has still issued no patch for stupidity. Now we can move on to other pressing issues, like when exactly AT&T will deign to roll out the multimedia messaging we’ve all been waiting for since June.

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  • Panasonic tc p54z1 Review
    Panasonic tc p54z1, The Z1 Concept The combination of the VIERA Z1’s innovative technology and aesthetic design is truly without equal. The ultra-thin profile of this sophisticated series delivers stunning picture performance and elegant style making a bold statement within any home decor. With their thin and light designs. VIERA models offer unique new installation styles that have never before been possible. For people who want the ultimate in design.


    Product Features
    54-inch Viera Z1 Series Plasma
    1-inch Ultra Thin Design
    WirelessHDTM Connectivity
    600Hz technology lets you view superb full-HD motion and still images with 1,080 lines of resolution
    THX reproduces movie images exactly as the movie’s creators intended them
    Technical Details
    Model: TCP54Z1
    Panasonic TC-P54Z1 54-inch VIERA 1080p Plasma HDTV

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  • Facebook and Twitter driving mobile net usage
    NEW YORK: A third of young people regularly access Facebook and Twitter via their mobile, a new report has found.
    The study, published by mobile research firm CCS Insight, found that access to social networking sites was driving the take-up of mobile internet services, BBC reported.
    Facebook is more popular than Bebo, MySpace and Twitter combined, it found.
    Its study – into mobile usage among 16 to 35 year olds – also found that the service most youngsters wanted on their phones was the BBC iPlayer.
    The suggestion that Facebook is more popular than Twitter chimes with a recently published Morgan Stanley report on internet and mobile usage.
    Compiled by a 15-year-old intern, the report said that teenagers favoured Facebook over Twitter.
    “Teenagers do not use Twitter. They realise that no-one is viewing their profile, so their tweets are pointless,” Matthew Robson wrote in the report.
    He echoes the words of CCS Insight analyst Paulo Pescatore.
    “Forget music and video downloads, social networking is where it’s at and Facebook is king of the hill,” he said.

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  • Embedded Linux company boasts 1-second boot
    The race to faster boot times is on.
    MontaVista, an embedded Linux company based in Santa Clara, Calif., said Tuesday its latest system is able to boot in one second and released a video that shows a vehicle dashboard system going from cold boot into a "fully operational" state in that time.
    The one-second timing may not be directly translatable to a desktop Linux OS environment, however, because booting a full-fledged OS requires additional drivers and processes to be launched.
    Intel's Netbook Linux OS, Moblin, is also eyeing fast boot times. The chipmaker recently partnered with Phoenix Technologies, which produces a fast-boot technology called HyperSpace, promising to bring the technology to the Moblin project.
    The software consists of a stripped down Linux environment with a browser and Wi-Fi software, meant to go from bootup to the Web quickly.
    According to reports, Moblin integrating HyperSpace should be able to go from off to the Web in less than 10 seconds.
    Competitor Canonical has also said its latest release Ubuntu 9.04 is focused on booting faster.

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  • Microsoft start testing on Office 2010
    SEATTLE, USA: Microsoft Corp. is giving a select group of technology-savvy testers an early peek at Office 2010, but it is still keeping Web-based versions of Word, Excel and its other go-to programs under wraps.
    Office 2010 is due out in the early part of next year. Microsoft is adding more ways for people to work simultaneously on documents, organize their e-mail and edit videos and photos, among other changes.
    Microsoft Office is by far the most popular software package for making presentations, spreadsheets and other documents. But the company has been slow to offer programs that run online and are accessible in Web browsers. Meanwhile Google Inc. has been pushing its own free versions for more than two years.
    When Office 2010 arrives, consumers will be able to go online to view and create new files for free. Companies that have long-term licensing agreements for Office software can run the Web software on their own servers, or buy subscriptions to access the programs through Microsoft-operated data centers.
    The company is not saying how much Office 2010 will cost. Microsoft will sell five variations on the package, two for big corporations and three available to consumers and small businesses.
    Microsoft says people attending its annual partner conference this week in New Orleans will be among the tens of thousands invited to try the new software.

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  • Google Operating System
    Google Operating System, Nine months after having launched the Chrome web browser, Google just now announced the Google Chrome Operating System, “an attempt to re-think what operating systems should be.” Google plans to offer the OS for use on a wide array of devices in about a year. Snip from the official Google Blog:(google chrome os)Google Chrome OS is an open source, lightweight operating system that will initially be targeted at netbooks. Later this year we will open-source its code, and netbooks running Google Chrome OS will be available for consumers in the second half of 2010. Because we’re already talking to partners about the project, and we’ll soon be working with the open source community, we wanted to share our vision now so everyone understands what we are trying to achieve.
    Speed, simplicity and security are the key aspects of Google Chrome OS. We’re designing the OS to be fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds. The user interface is minimal to stay out of your way, and most of the user experience takes place on the web. And as we did for the Google Chrome browser, we are going back to the basics and completely redesigning the underlying security architecture of the OS so that users don’t have to deal with viruses, malware and security updates. It should just work.

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  • Google to launch operating system
    Google is developing an operating system (OS) for personal computers, in a direct challenge to market leader Microsoft and its Windows system.
    Google Chrome OS will be aimed initially at netbooks, the low-cost portable computers that have turned the PC world upside down.
    Google said netbooks with Chrome OS could be on sale by the middle of 2010.
    "Speed, simplicity and security are the key aspects of Google Chrome OS," said the company in a blog.
    The news could also be a blow to the open source Linux operating system, which had taken an early lead on netbooks, but then lost out to Microsoft's elderly Windows XP.
    For Microsoft the news comes just months before it launches the latest version of its operating system, called Windows 7.
    'Back to basics'
    "We're designing the OS to be fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds," said the blog post written by Sundar Pichai, vice president of product management, and Google's engineering director Linus Upson.
    Both men said that "the operating systems that browsers run on were designed in an era where there was no web" and that this OS is "our attempt to re-think what operating systems should be".
    To that end, the search giant said the new OS would go back to basics.
    "We are completely redesigning the underlying security architecture of the OS so that users don't have to deal with viruses, malware and security updates.
    "It should just work," said Google.
    Google already has an operating system for mobile phones called Android which can also be used to run on netbooks. Google Chrome OS will be aimed not just at laptops but also at desktops for those who spend a lot of time on the web.
    "Truly competitive"
    The announcement could dramatically change the market for operating systems, especially for Microsoft, the biggest player with around 90% share.
    "This announcement is huge," said Rob Enderle, industry watcher and president of the Enderle Group.
    "This is the first time we have had a truly competitive OS on the market in years. This is potentially disruptive and is the first real attempt by anyone to go after Microsoft.
    "Google is coming at this fresh and, because it is based on a set of services that reside on the web, it is the first really post web operating system, designed from the ground up, and reconceived for a web world," Mr Enderle told the BBC.
    Last year Google launched the Chrome browser, which it said was designed for "people who live on the web - searching for information, checking email, catching up on the news, shopping or just staying in touch with friends."
    Stephen Shankland at CNET said the move had widespread implications.
    "One is that it shows just how serious Google is about making the web into a foundation not just for static pages but for active applications, notably its own such as Google Docs and G-mail.
    "Another: it opens new competition with Microsoft and, potentially, a new reason for anti-trust regulators to pay close attention to Google's moves."
    Some commentators said Google's motivation in all this was pretty clear.
    "One of Google's major goals is to take Microsoft out, to systematically destroy their hold on the market," said Mr Enderle.
    "Google wants to eliminate Microsoft and it's a unique battle. The strategy is good. The big question is, will it work?"
    At the popular blog, TechCrunch, MG Siegler said "Let's be clear on what this really is. This is Google dropping the mother of all bombs on its rival, Microsoft."
    Microsoft releases Windows 7 later this year to replace Windows Vista and Windows XP which is eight years old.
    The Redmond based company claims that 96% of netbooks run Windows to date.

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  • Sony Ericsson’s New Android Phone leaked As Sony Ericsson keeps mum about their development on a Google Android-based phone, a Danish website leaked information about its upcoming Android phone. Named as “Rachael”, Sony Ericsson scheduled its announcement later of this year according to Danish’s Mobil magazine. They also said that this particular phone model will be included in SE’s XPERIA series. So far, XPERIA series was included in the Windows Mobile X1 model.The leaked pictures show how sleek it looks and some of its specifications give a very good fight to other smartphones on the market today. For instance having an 8.1-megapixel camera has greater edge to other smartphones which is limited to 3-megapixel cameras. When it comes to its fellow Android phones, it also reigns supreme as both the HTC Hero and Samsung Galaxy has only 5-megapixel camera.

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  • Samsung S5230 Star review: Hot starlet
    Samsung are going to great lengths to pile pressure on the LG Cookie. While the Samsung S5600 Preston aims to outdo it, the 5230 Star is set for a head-on collision course. This starlet's middle name is Tocco Lite and that's plenty to live up to.
    The name itself is no shortcut to stardom but the Tocco pedigree certainly brings with it certain expectations of quality. So will this little Star still be going strong a year from launch? The S5230 certainly has all the ingredients, now all we need to do is see if Samsung has got the mix right.
    Add a dash of touchscreen and nifty unlock, a pinch of smart looks and document viewer, DNSe and smile shutter to taste. Samsung's widget-wielding TouchWiz makes reading the recipe a cinch.

    It's a dish that's already proving popular - the Star is already shifting over a million units per month and Samsung expect to total 10 million sold by the end of the year. Certainly an ambitious plan, but they just might pull it off - the Star is set to become one of Samsung's bestsellers.

    Samsung S5230 main features:
    GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, GPRS/EDGE class 12
    Dimensions: 104.0 x 53.0 x 11.9 mm, 93.5 g
    3" resistive TFT touchscreen, WQVGA resolution (240 x 400 pixels)
    50MB onboard storage, microSD card slot (up to 16GB)
    3 megapixel fixed focus camera with smile detection
    Bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP, USB v.2.0
    Document viewer
    Smart unlock
    Accelerometer sensor
    FM radio with RDS
    DNSe
    Find Music recognition service
    1000 mAh battery, up to 800 h of standby

    Main disadvantages
    No 3G
    Proprietary connectivity port
    Slightly more expensive than the LG KP500 Cookie
    No way to directly switch between running apps
    The camera is quite basic - uninspiring picture quality, no autofocus or flash
    Non-hot-swappable microSD slot The Star offers a basic touchscreen package with little to no access to top-of-the-line technology. It still knows a trick or two though and is keen to treat the masses to Smart Unlock. It was initially dubbed Gesture lock but in the end Samsung went for Smart instead. This feature lets users unlock the S5230 Star and even launch apps by drawing a letter on the screen. It can be any letter: U to unlock the device, B to launch the browser, J to run your favorite Java app. It's a nifty trick that adds a little speed and spice when working with the device.
    Jump to the next page for a guided tour of the Star exterior. We'll look closer at the few things that have changed since our early-bird preview.

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  • LG teases with new LG Chocolate Black Label


    LG is bringing in the big guns - they announced a successor of the extremely popular Black Label series pioneer - LG Chocolate. The original Chocolate was the most popular phone in LG's history, selling over 21 million handsets, and so understandably its reincarnation is greeted with excitement.
    The new LG Chocolate is set to be fourth in their fashion series. It will be designed by the same team that created the original Chocolate and, as they say, it will be "a disruptive force in conventional mobile screens". It's official unveiling is scheduled for August, with a promise of more information and images. For now, there's very little of both.


    What we have is artsy, very dark photos that give a murky glimpse at the silhouette of the phone. It's not entirely clear but it seems that the disrupting of conventional screens will be in the name of maximizing usability and maintaining a minimalist-inspired style. Translation - "it's going to be an iPhone killer". The new Chocolate's appeal will be boosted in no small part by the exclusive Label club Black membership.
    Now, for a quick game of "strange rumors". The model number will be BL40 (though that may change) and will probably support HSDPA (not surprising). The screen is said to have an extremely peculiar aspect ratio of 21:9 and a resolution of 800x345 pixels. That is quite wide, much wider than your typical HDTV. How this ties with "maximizing usability" (if that's even true) we don't know , but it's sure to come with its own set of advantages and burdens. Another rumored spec, one that's less iffy is a 5-megapixel camera.
    Anyway, August is just around the corner so soon we'll know more. This wider-than-you-can-imagine screen is certainly interesting (and most dubious of the rumored features) so if it gets confirmed, it will certainly be a novelty, hopefully coupled with state-of-the-art display technology.

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  • Nokia 3720 is ready to replace golf and rugby balls The still unannounced rugged Nokia 3720 was shown off on several official teaser videos, where some guys do all they can to break it. They play golf and kick it rugby style, but the robust 3720 got away unscratched.
    We have already informed you that Nokia are working on another rugged handset after the pretty popular 5500 Sport back in 2006. The heavy duty phone should be able to survive plenty of disasters, that would turn out fatal for its siblings.
    Unluckily for the smartphone fans the Nokia 3720 will run on the S40 platform. It is IP54 certified, meaning it's dust and splash resistant.The new Nokia will be a clear shot at the two Samsung ruggedized handsets - the 3G enabled Samsung B2700 and the cheaper Samsung B2100 Xplorer. Given the advantage those two have on hitting the shelves the Nokia certainly won't have an easy task.
    After the first unofficial leak it now came time for Nokia themselves to release a little teaser about the handset. Several cool videos popped up on the Nokia Conversations website showing how Nokia 3720 handles extensive torture. In the first one the little Finn takes the role of a rugby ball but gets away pretty easily.

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  • New carriers at heart of defence debate
    A steel-cutting ceremony at Govan shipyard marks the beginning of construction of two new aircraft carriers, military vessels that stir emotions among supporters and opponents alike.
    What is it about aircraft carriers?
    Of course they are big. And they are expensive. The latest estimate is that the Royal Navy's two new carriers, HMSs Queen Elizabeth and Prince of Wales, will cost £5bn - 25% up on just a year ago.
    But it is not just that. Perhaps more than any weapons except nuclear ones, aircraft carriers tend to be seen as a statement of how a country views its military role in the world. And therein lies a lot of the controversy which seems to surround them.
    The steel-cutting ceremony in Glasgow is certainly a historic event. It marks the formal start of construction of HMS Queen Elizabeth.
    The last time that happened in Britain for a "proper" full-size aircraft carrier was 65 years ago. (The ship then was HMS Hermes, of Falklands fame, still serving now in the Indian Navy as the Viraat.)
    But the carriers have also been at the heart of the arguments over the levels of and priorities in defence spending.
    Continuing relevance?
    Opponents, including some in the Army and the RAF, see them as expensive luxuries of little relevance to the kinds of campaigns Britain has been fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    They should, the argument goes, be sacrificed to pay for urgent shortfalls - in army equipment in particular.


    Displacement: 65,000 tonnes
    Length: 280m (920ft)
    Width (at flight-deck level): 70m (230ft)
    Keel to masthead: 56m (184ft)
    Nine decks (plus flight deck)
    Speed: 25+ knots
    Range: 8,000-10,000 miles
    Aircraft: 36 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters and four Airborne Early Warning aircraft, plus EH 101 Merlin helicopters
    Crew: 1,450 (including air crew)
    Weapons: Phalanx close-in weapon systems; 30mm and mini-guns
    Source: Ministry of Defence

    The admirals, of course, disagree. They point out that the ships are designed to last for up to 50 years - and who knows what the threats will be then?
    In that context, they insist, they are actually hugely flexible national assets - floating airfields that are not reliant on the goodwill of allies, that could help deter future conflicts, provide vital air support for troops ashore if they do occur again, and be able to perform a whole range of other missions - perhaps as huge helicopter platforms for some future humanitarian crisis.
    But the £5bn price tag for the ships themselves is just the start.
    There is also the question of the aircraft that they are chiefly designed to carry - the Joint Strike Fighters for both the Navy and the RAF, which will cost some £12bn.

    The commitment to the carriers was at the heart of Labour's 1998 Strategic Defence Review. But the sceptics say that the world has moved on.
    And with commentators and the opposition both insisting that the Ministry of Defence's current plans are unsustainable, and that the state of the public finances means that there will have to be further savings in areas like defence, there have been growing calls for a new defence review, with these programmes very much in the spotlight.
    Some argue that any such review also has to be in the context of a broader security review, beyond just defence, and a foreign policy re-think, that ask questions about whether the country can and should still try to project the kind of military power that the carriers imply.
    There have been many echoes in the current debate from the 1960s, when the Navy last tried to win approval for a new class of big aircraft carriers.
    The backdrop then was also that of an economic crisis, and questions over what level of international military footprint the country could afford.
    There was a bitter inter-service fight between the Navy and the RAF. On that occasion, the Navy lost out. The then Labour government cancelled the carrier plans in 1966.
    The Navy's consolation prize was a class of what were dubbed "through-deck cruisers", described as such in part to throw potential opponents off the scent that they were, in reality, mini-carriers.
    The first, HMS Invincible, which also served in the Falklands and basically had to perform as a traditional carrier, is now in reserve. The other two, Illustrious and Ark Royal, soldier on for the time being.
    Progress
    The new carriers will be about three times the size of the current ships, and - at 65,000 tonnes - the largest British warships ever.
    Britain's previous biggest carriers were HMS Eagle and the old Ark Royal, star of the Sailor television series in the mid-1970s, at 50,000 tonnes.
    The plan is that the new ships will be built in blocks at four different shipyards, before being finally assembled at Rosyth. Officially, it has been stated that the construction programme will help create and sustain 10,000 jobs.
    The only warships in the world that are significantly bigger are the US Navy's super-carriers, which weigh in at up to 100,000 tonnes. (They are nuclear-powered, and carry about 80 aircraft. HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales are designed to accommodate about 40.)
    For the Navy, it has already been a tortuous process to get to this point with the new ships.
    There are bound to be questions still about their future, against the current political and economic backdrop.
    But, at least for the Navy, they have already progressed further than its last abortive big-carrier effort in the 1960s.

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